Wednesday, May 15, 2013

“Whoever heard of a midwife as a literary heroine? Yet midwifery is the very stuff of drama. Every child is conceived either in love or lust, is born in pain, followed by joy or sometimes remorse. A midwife is in the thick of it, she sees it all.” ~ Jennifer Worth, The Midwife: A Memoir of Birth, Joy, and Hard Times

I must say, I do feel as though I am being unfaithful to Downton Abbey, but I am in love with Call the Midwife(please don't tell Maggie Smith). With one week to go before the final episode of its second season, it will be a long 10 months before Season 3 begins!

"In drawing from the memoirs of Jennifer Worth, the BBC's Call the Midwife instantly distinguished itself from most other medical dramas, largely because it's a more character-driven piece. Jessica Raine, who evokes the openhearted Judy Garland of The Wizard of Oz, plays Jenny Lee, a middle-class 22-year-old who takes a job at an Anglican convent in 1957, where the young nurses work alongside experienced nuns: calm Sister Julienne (Jenny Agutter), stern Sister Evangelina (Pam Ferris), and spacey, cake-addicted Sister Monica Joan (Judy Parfitt, who costarred with Ferris in Little Doritt).Jenny is hardy and judgmental, but the depth of poverty permeating London's East End provides a wake-up call (suffice to say, gynecological care has come a long way since the 1950s). To be effective, though, she must learn to put her preconceptions aside about teenage prostitutes, unwed mothers, squalid living conditions, and inappropriate relationships. Her upper-class colleague, Camilla "Chummy" Cholomondley-Browne (Miranda Hart, quite affecting), seems like she'd be even deeper out of her depth, but looks can be deceiving--even if Chummy finds it harder to handle the bikes the nurses use to cycle between appointments. It is written byCranford's Heidi Thomas and narrated by Vanessa Redgrave." www.amazon.com

www.pbs.org

In Downton Abbey, with the focus on the Crawley Estate and its inhabitants both upstairs and down. life seems insulated. Absolutely the events of the world have an impact, but we mostly see life from inside the estate walls. I'm not complaining about that mind you - it's a wonderful series and I can't wait for Season 4! Call the Midwife, by comparison, is very much out in the world - and it's a gritty place. While we are privy to the hopes, dreams and anxieties of the midwives, the nuns of Nonnatus House and the lives of the inhabitants of London's East End, we also see the day-to-day struggle of lives that are not filled with privilege. These are mostly caring people in a cold and harsh corner of the world - and it's amazing to see.

If you are not familiar with Call the Midwife, go to PBS and you can watch episode previews and in the case of Season 2 - full episodes. If you want to get caught up before season three begins sometime in spring, 2014 - you have several options available. First, you can try your local library. Mine has all of Season 1, and I imagine that it will get Season 2 once it's available in DVD (June 7th). Netflix currently has all of Season 1 available to "watch instantly", and if you have Amazon Prime, you can also watch the episodes instantly, but for a small fee. PBS is currently offering instant watching of all of Season 2 online - but beware that this will expire at some point (Season one was offered on this site up until about 2 weeks ago). And of course, there is always the option to purchase the seasons on DVD for yourself. Season 2 on DVD will include the Christmas special that aired several months ago. Short of watching that episode on Amazon Prime, this may be the only way to get to see it.

It's wonderful, it really is. If you are a Downton fan, and even if you are not - give it a go!

Thank you for the tipp, Tracy! I am a huge fan of series made by the BBC and always hope that German TV productions would learn more lessons from them (they don't) - but at least they managed to bring Season 1 of Downton Abbey on TV - still waiting for Season 2 though :)

I will definitely check out this series, too, although it seems to be a hard topic...

It is hard but it is also real. You grow to love and care about the characters. I'm glad to be a woman in the 21st Century. However the fact that the series begins right around the year that I was born shows just how many advancements there have been made to medicine and women's medicine.

About Me

I am a retired junior high teacher who lives in Central New York. I have always enjoyed the arts, reading and making things with my own hands. Sadly, as a new interest in cooking has emerged, so has the need to eat less - is there no justice?!
I have a wonderful husband and son who are always supportive of my ventures. I also have a diverse group of friends who feed my need for laughter, creativity, and shoulders to lean on.
I am one lucky lady!